José Rufino Echenique Benavente | |
Order: | 12th President of Peru |
Term Start: | April 20, 1851 |
Term End: | January 5, 1855 |
Predecessor: | Ramón Castilla |
Successor: | Ramón Castilla |
Birth Date: | November 16, 1808 |
Birth Place: | Puno, Viceroyalty of Peru, Spanish Empire |
Death Date: | June 16, 1887 (aged 78) |
Death Place: | Lima, Peru |
Allegiance: | Peru |
Branch: | Peruvian Army |
Rank: | Brigadier general |
Serviceyears: | 1821–1854 |
Battles: | Peruvian War of Independence 1828 Peruvian–Bolivian War
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José Rufino Pompeyo Echenique Benavente (November 16, 1808 – June 16, 1887) served as the 12th President of Peru from 1851 to 1855.
He participated in the Peruvian War of Independence and the Peruvian Civil Wars of 1834 and 1843–44. Echenique won the 1851 Peruvian presidential election to succeed Ramón Castilla. Under his government, the first civil laws of Peru were promulgated, and slavery was abolished. The finalizing phase of the construction of the Tacna-Arica railroad was also completed.
Echenique was overthrown by a liberal revolution led by Ramón Castilla in 1855 after a ball hosted by his wife, Victoria Tristán. He served as the President of the Chamber of Deputies in 1864, and President of the Senate from 1868 to 1871.[1]
His son, Juan Martín Echenique, was also active in Peruvian politics.
Echenique hosted the Post-Impressionist painter Paul Gauguin and Gauguin's mother in his presidential home in central Lima from 1849 to 1854, during Gauguin's childhood.